Obesity-susceptibility loci and the tails of the pediatric BMI distribution

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Abstract

Objective: To determine whether previously identified adult obesity susceptibility loci were associated uniformly with childhood BMI across the BMI distribution. Design and Methods: Children were recruited through the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (n = 7,225). Associations between the following loci and BMI were assessed using quantile regression: FTO (rs3751812), MC4R (rs12970134), TMEM18 (rs2867125), BDNF (rs6265), TNNI3K (rs1514175), NRXN3 (rs10146997), SEC16B (rs10913469), and GNPDA2 (rs13130484). BMI z-score (age and gender adjusted) was modeled as the dependent variable, and genotype risk score (sum of risk alleles carried at the 8 loci) was modeled as the independent variable. Results: Each additional increase in genotype risk score was associated with an increase in BMI z-score at the 5th, 15th, 25th, 50th, 75th, 85th, and 95th BMI z-score percentiles by 0.04 (±0.02, P = 0.08), 0.07 (±0.01, P = 9.58 × 10-7), 0.07 (±0.01, P = 1.10 × 10-8), 0.09 (±0.01, P = 3.13 × 10 -22), 0.11 (±0.01, P = 1.35 × 10-25), 0.11 (±0.01, P = 1.98 × 10-20), and 0.06 (±0.01, P = 2.44 × 10-6), respectively. Each additional increase in genotype risk score was associated with an increase in mean BMI z-score by 0.08 (±0.01, P = 4.27 × 10-20). Conclusion: Obesity risk alleles were more strongly associated with increases in BMI z-score at the upper tail compared to the lower tail of the distribution. Copyright © 2013 The Obesity Society.

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APA

Mitchell, J. A., Hakonarson, H., Rebbeck, T. R., & Grant, S. F. A. (2013). Obesity-susceptibility loci and the tails of the pediatric BMI distribution. Obesity, 21(6), 1256–1260. https://doi.org/10.1002/oby.20319

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